Former Football Pro Closes Doors Of Car Dealership


In early December, the Aeneas Williams Dealerships (No. 60 on the be auto dealer 100 list with $41.1 million in sales) unexpectedly closed the doors of its Monroe, Louisiana-based Lincoln-Mercury dealership.

“With so many unknown variables surrounding the auto industry, it was clear that the dealership environment was not going to maintain the status quo as in past times. Instead of waiting on the uncertainty, we decided to be proactive by closing the Lincoln-Mercury dealership,” said owner Aeneas Williams in a statement. Williams is a former NFL safety who played for the Arizona Cardinals and the St. Louis Rams. He retired in 2005.

In 2001, the Williams Automotive Group purchased The Honda Store and Monroe Auto World, which carried Lincoln, Mercury, Chrysler, and Plymouth. In 2002, the two dealerships-along with Regency Motors and Toyota of Bastrop-merged to become the Aeneas Williams Dealerships.

The Williams Group sold the Chrysler brand in 2006. Sales in 2002 were a reported $71 million, slipping to $45 million in 2006.

“Owning, managing, and operating a significant number of automotive dealerships definitely pose an enormous challenge,” Williams said.

But Williams Automotive is not alone. Hiro Mori, director for The Automotive Consulting Group, an Ann Arbor, Michigan-based consulting agency to the automotive world, noted that “the sales climate for the Detroit Three-GM, Ford, Chrysler-dealers is going down.” Mori attributed the downturn to a “significant number of dealers per square mile.” He also said the image of Lincoln as a luxury brand has diminished. “There is stiff competition from Mercedes and BMW,” Mori said, adding that, “Mercury is not really a luxury brand either. It’s kind of obscure.”


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